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Sarah's Progress Photos

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  • sarah h
    replied
    Re: Sarah's Progress Photos

    It's one of the great things about this forum, that whenever you reach a new oven milestone there are others here who can appreciate it , so thanks everyone! Non-oven-owners often don't have a clue of what it took to get there.

    I will post some pics of my oven cracks but it could take a day or two - it is miserably cold outside right now, and dark too, and I think it's meant to rain tomorrow. (By February, I'll think of a day like today as great weather and be out there cooking!! ) My husband thinks we should coat the entire dome in castable refractory - any comments?

    As for the pizza shape, I don't really care, but I would love to be able to fling the dough in the air and catch it again with some degree of flair - whether it'll happen is another matter. My biggest problem at the moment keeping holes from happening in the middle part before the rest of the dough is stretched. I know it'll get better though.

    I'm looking forward to trying out some more unconventional pizzas too - I used to have a recipe for a pizza with blue cheese and pears on a rye crust (how much of the audience did I lose there?) that I always wanted to try ... if I can find it again. Then there's the Middle Eastern one with lamb. How about figs (when I can get them here) and goat cheese? Wow, I'm getting hungry! Time to go eat ... and maybe time to switch to a food thread ...

    Last thing - while the oven has now had seven fires and yesterday's was a big one, I don't think the oven is fully cured yet. I'm taking a break from fires tonight though .

    Sarah

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  • Kemo
    replied
    Re: Sarah's Progress Photos

    Originally posted by dalucca2003 View Post
    Just remember these pizza's we make are "Artisan" and are meant to be most shapes but perfectly round. Kemo, has the disk improved your dough stretching?

    oddly enough...it has. I can sling it up in the air alot better now. I dont know if it makes the pizza taste any better, but it sure does add some fun to the process

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  • dalucca2003
    replied
    Re: Sarah's Progress Photos

    Just remember these pizza's we make are "Artisan" and are meant to be most shapes but perfectly round. Kemo, has the disk improved your dough stretching?

    Leave a comment:


  • Kemo
    replied
    Re: Sarah's Progress Photos

    Originally posted by gjbingham View Post
    Great pizza Sarah! I've tried tossing the dough but it always ends up in disaster. Practice, practice.
    George

    George,

    I went so far as to purchase the instructional video from the US Pizza team website on how to toss dough. Its a little rubbery piece that resembles a 14" dough disk. its actually quite fun and addictive. I sling it around the office at work. People think im an idiot though

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  • gjbingham
    replied
    Re: Sarah's Progress Photos

    Great pizza Sarah! I've tried tossing the dough but it always ends up in disaster. Practice, practice.
    George

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  • oventhusiast
    replied
    Re: Sarah's Progress Photos

    Hi Sarah,
    Like most of us, I think you'll find as we use our ovens more and more, we'll just keep getting better at every aspect of oven management and food prep,etc.. It's just too much fun to experiment with it! By the way, your first pizza looked 'kinda' like ours as far as doneness and I'll bet it tasted just as good! Aren't they awesome? Do you think you could post some pictures of the dome cracking that you mentioned? I would like to compare it with my dome cracks to see if we are talking about the same type and sizes etc.. I don't think it's something we should worry about but it seems I'm the only one who posted photos of dome cracks (unless I just can't locate any other pics in the galleries) and I'd like to compare them just to see what to these domes do after expansion.
    Thanks Much,
    Rick

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  • Frances
    replied
    Re: Sarah's Progress Photos

    WOW!! Congratulations! It looks absolutely delicious! I'm really pleased for you! And all before the winter set in, too...

    I agree with Versachi, who cares about the shape? It's the taste that matters. Maybe the hallmark of a truly hommede pizza is the fact that it isn't perfectly round.

    The cracks sound dealable with, and the dome will continue to heat up better and better till the moisture has left it.

    So when's the next pizza planned?

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  • Versachi
    replied
    Re: Sarah's Progress Photos

    Hey Sarah, most of us need work on our pizza skills including me. Still your worst pizza crust will probably be better that anything you buy at a store or get delivered imo. Don't worry too much about the shapes of pizza's and bread. I find that I have to fight myself to not try and shape my pizza and bread so that it will conform with the rest of the world. We shouldn't look at your pizza as being "a funny triangle shape" it should just be "The pizza that I made that tasted great" !

    I give you high marks for the burning ring of fire ( the pic not the singing ). I think that as oven owners we all have to have that ring of fire picture in the photo album for ourselves and to send to others to brag about what we have and they don't!!

    I would try and fix the cracks now so you can sleep easy this winter. I wouldn't patch the oven when its hot but with the cooler air you should be able to have a a fire that would just warm the bricks so that you could mortar them and allow it to cure overnight.

    Cheers, John

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  • sarah h
    replied
    Re: Sarah's Progress Photos

    Lots of wood - big flames - a widening crack - a partially white dome - finally, a hot floor ... and then came pizza! SOOOO COOOOL!!!

    My pizza-making skills definitely need work but it tasted fantastic, even the burnt bit. We used olive oil, San Marzanos, a mozzarella-provolone mix and fresh basil - absolutely delicious!

    A 180-turn half way through would have been a good idea as it cooked way quicker on one side. By pizzas number two and three, the floor had already cooled too much (even for the first it likely wasn't as hot as it should have been, ideally) but they were still good. I'll keep more of a fire going next time during cooking as this one was just coals by the time we got going.

    There is still moisture - steam started to rise from the dome. Cracks developed in several place, mostly very thin and running horizontally, but some quite long. The one that showed up yesterday grew wider and started to leak smoke (but it seems to be the only one to do this) so there's some patchwork to do, but I'm thinking that unless there's a really good reason not to wait, I'll fix it in the spring ... or can you patch cracks while the oven is warm and allow the mortar to dry faster?

    Anyway, the photos are of Pizza #1 - how 'bout that circle of coals in the first pic?

    It cooked fast, fast, fast
    In a burnin' ring of fire ...

    - a funny triangle shape; two and three were better formed though still not exactly round. And I discovered why I should have a wet mop handy - they were a bit ash-enhanced in spots (though not too bad really) - I'll have to find one with a wooden handle - all the ones I've seen so far have been plastic!

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  • gjbingham
    replied
    Re: Sarah's Progress Photos

    Sarah,
    Thanks for the reassurance. I started to worry that the place where I bought my firebrick sold me high duty vs. low.
    I did my final curing fire yesterday. My cladding cracked like an eggshell as well, and also have cracks around the angle iron oven opening. I kind of expected this due to the differences in expansion of the three materials involved.
    I had noted some steam from a couple of the cladding cracks a couple of days ago, then it disappeared. I cannot see any sign of cracking on the inside of the oven, but on my 600 degree fire, I closed off the opening with bricks, trying to retain the heat inside. It turned the fire into a very smokey (sp?) affair, and then suddenly reality set in. I had smoke, very small whisps eminating from a small area in one of the cladding cracks at the back upper third of the dome.
    I didn't even sweat it. I kind of expected it, and I'm sure not going to try to repair it. It must be a really small defect to only emit a teeny bit of smoke.

    Sounds like you might make it through your curing without suffering a similar experience. I hope that is the case. I look forward to hearing how it goes.
    G.

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  • oventhusiast
    replied
    Re: Sarah's Progress Photos

    Hey Sarah,
    Congrats on the curing fires! The dome looks great and don't worry if it starts to crack. It HAS to expand! My dome cracked like throwing a cold egg into boiling water! But I'm not really worried about it. It's still very solid and strong. I tried to clad it with a bag of Heat Stop 50, personally I think I should have left it alone. All I did was added a bit more (unneeded) mass to the dome and it still cracked after that AND it cost me another $50. or so. Big waste of time and money Anyway, Enjoy!
    Rick

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  • sarah h
    replied
    Re: Sarah's Progress Photos

    Curing fire number 6 was done this afternoon - see the second pic below (first is from fire 5) - Acoma, you can see the wood we already had on hand but I get the feeling I'll go through it pretty quick as it only fills about half the storage area!

    George, I got to 600F today (top of the dome likely a bit hotter, no way to know) and the heat pattern is almost identical to yours - the dome warms as the coals die and, yes, at least an hour before I can feel it on the outside. I'm operating these days in temps that are just above freezing. More of it gets warm now, more of the way down the dome, but only very faintly at the bottom (barely detectable) and - I find this a bit worrisome - I can still put my hand on the floor, even when the temp higher up is at 600F! My door is often in place due to wing and cold, but raised up about 2 inches at the bottom for air flow, so maybe the draw of the cold air along the floor has something to do with it. It's starting to make me wonder if winter cooking might have its own special challenges (like no pizza till spring ).

    I was silently gloating to myself about not having sustained any cracks, when what to my wondering eyes should appear (yes, hard to avoid noticing that season is coming, what with the non-stop ads) but a crack , fairly long, in behind the chimney - not wide, maybe 1/16th of an inch at its widest, but there's no smoke or light emanating from it so hopefully it's OK.

    Super-big fire planned for tomorrow ...

    Sarah

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  • gjbingham
    replied
    Re: Sarah's Progress Photos

    Hey Sarah,
    As you get farther into your curing fires, I'm curious if you could check to see how long it takes the exterior of the dome to warm up (to the touch).

    I felt it wasn't really noticeable at all on the first couple of fires, then by the 3rd or 4th, the dome would be warm about an hour after lighting the fire, after the fire was nothing but smoldering coals.
    After my 600 degree burn, I'm still seeing the same pattern, though more now the entire dome gets warm on the outside, not just the top. Still about an hour or so.
    Thanks
    George

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  • Acoma
    replied
    Re: Sarah's Progress Photos

    Hey, I just noticed that I am now a Journeyman.....James.

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  • Acoma
    replied
    Re: Sarah's Progress Photos

    Sarah, only a few more fires to go. It's great to see you so close to complete. Have you already aquired your wood for the oven?

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